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YOKO ONO: THE RIVERBED

Thu Feb 22 to Jun 03,All Day

Please note: On June 3 from 12 to 5 pm, the public will be invited to participate in a new work by Yoko Ono entitled CLEANING PIECE FOR GARDINERto commemorate the closing of the show. Visitors will be admitted on a first-come, first-served basis. Visitors who buy advance tickets online are not guaranteed front-of-the-line entry and will need to be checked in at the Front Desk. Please visit the event page for full details.

The Gardiner Museum is pleased to present a three-part installation by Yoko Ono entitled THE RIVERBED. Yoko Ono is a forerunner of Conceptual art who frequently involves collaboration, audience participation, and social activism in her artwork.

YOKO ONO: THE RIVERBED invites visitors to collaborate with the artist, the museum, and each other, participating in the artwork through everyday action and contemplation. YOKO ONO:THE RIVERBED, in a sense, becomes a temporary village—a repository of hopes and dreams for individuals and for the world.

Stone Piece features a pile of river stones that have been honed and shaped by water over time. Ono has inscribed some of the stones with words, such as dream, wish, and remember. Visitors are invited to pick up a stone and hold it, concentrating on the word, and then placing the stone upon the pile of other stones in the center of the room.

Line Piece is comprised of a series of low tables with notebooks in which visitors are encouraged by Ono to “draw a line to take me to the farthest place in our planet.” Visitors may also extend a string across the gallery space using hammers and nails to secure it from one point or another, creating a web that will grow and evolve over the course of the exhibition.

Mend Piece reinforces the idea of healing. Fragments of broken ceramic cups and saucers are placed on a table for visitors to reassemble using glue, string, and tape, before positioning them on shelves around the all-white room. In Ono’s words: “As you mend the cup, mending that is needed elsewhere in the Universe gets done as well. Be aware of it as you mend.” (November 19, 2015)

The space also features an espresso bar courtesy of illy where visitors are encouraged to enjoy a complimentary cup of espresso together, forming another kind of union.

YOKO ONO: THE RIVERBED was first mounted at Gallerie Lelong & Co. and Andrea Rosen Gallery in New York City, in 2015.

About Yoko Ono

Yoko Ono (born February 18, 1933) is an artist, musician, filmmaker, and peace activist. In the last sixty years, Ono has continued to play a pioneering role in the international development of Conceptual art, experimental film, and performance art, and has been acknowledged progressively more for these roles. In 2015, the Museum of Modern Art in New York presented Yoko Ono: One Woman Show, 1961-71, which reinforced her influence as one of the most important agents of cultural change. She received a Golden Lion Award for lifetime achievement from the Venice Biennale in 2009, and the Oskar Kokoschka Prize in 2012, Austria’s highest award for applied contemporary art.

Exhibition Programs & Events

Wednesday February 21, 10 am – 6 pmFriends Day PreviewGardiner Friends are invited to join us for an exclusive preview of the exhibition, as well as a tour with curator Meredith Chilton at 2 pm.Learn more

Friday February 23, 7 – 10 pmVoice Pieces
Co-presentation with The Music Gallery
This intimate concert presentation will explore the legacy of Yoko Ono’s instructions, and present new works by three local artists: The Element Choir, an improvising choir directed by Christine Duncan, Lillian Allen, the internationally recognized godmother of dub poetry in Canada, and Mamalia, the former lead singer of the Juno-nominated contemporary jazz troupe Sekoya.$18 General / $15 Gardiner Friends + Music Gallery MembersSOLD OUT

EyeblinkEyeblink is a three-part monthly screening and performance series that draws inspiration from Ono’s 1960s and 1970s filmmaking. Here, the body cannot be separated from the body politic, actions speak louder than words, and closely observed cinematic gestures challenge traditional gendered representations. Each monthly event will sample Ono’s works shown alongside ambitious presentations of local female artists working in time-based art and performance.

Guided MeditationClear your head, silence your phone, and experience YOKO ONO: THE RIVERBED in solitude on a quiet Saturday morning. Co-presented with the Shambhala Meditation Centre of Toronto, these intimate guided meditation sessions will take place in the exhibition space, just before the museum opens to the public.

Monday March 26 and Wednesday May 23, 6:30 – 8 pm
IMAGINEPEACE Forum
Co-presentation with the Munk School of Global Affairs
Sponsored by ManulifeInspired by Ono’s peace activism, this two-event series moderated by renowned international relations expert Janice Stein, will pair artists with academics to discuss how governments and citizens are shaping their future in the digital space.$18 General / $15 Gardiner Friends
March 26: Get ticketsMay 23: Get tickets

Presenting Sponsor

Exhibition Partners

Government Supporter

This event has been financially assisted by the Ontario Cultural Attractions Fund a program of the Government of Ontario through the Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport, administered by the Ontario Cultural Attractions Fund Corporation.

With thanks to Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, the Government of Ontario and the City of Toronto.

Admission is FREE ALL YEAR for Gardiner Friends. Learn more about our membership benefits and levels here.

Coat & Bag Policy: Bags and coats are not permitted in the exhibition. We encourage you to travel light, or to take advantage of our complimentary self-serve coat room in the lobby. Unchecked bags will be requested to be left with gallery staff at the entrance of the exhibition. The Gardiner Museum is not responsible for any belongings left at the coat room or at the exhibition.